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PAGE 2—The Southern Cross, August 5,1971
MR. ‘MARCH OF DIMES’ - James Jones (center) a Red Cap on the Atlantic Coastline receives the
South Carolina Knights of Columbus annual charity award from James J. Knight, grand knight of
the local council as R. Jimmy Burch, state orphans fund chairman, looks on. The award took place
in Florence, S.C. Over the past 32 years Mr. Jones has collected more than $250,000 for March of
Dimes thus keeping a resolution made 48 years ago to his sweetheart who died of polio. (NC
PHOTO)
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FR. BONNIKE
NFPC Head Asks Synod Talk
Justice Prior To Ministry
CHICAGO (NC) - Father
Francis J. Bonnike, president
of the National Federation of
Priests’ Councils (NFPC), has
proposed that the world
Synod of Bishops, meeting in
Rome in October, discuss
world justice before
discussing the priestly
ministry.
“To do otherwise,” he
said, “may produce a
statement on priesthood
which would be unreal,
anachronistic and
inconsistent with Vatican
[Council] II and with
whatever the synod might say
about justice.”
Justice and the priesthood
are the two topics the synod
will discuss.
In view of Pope Paul Vi’s
May 14 apostolic letter to
Cardinal Maurice Roy,
president of the Pontifical
Commissioh Justice and
Peace, and the synod working
paper “Justice in the World,”
Father Bonnike said, it has
become clear to him that the
priesthood cannot be
discussed in a vacuum or
apart from the mission of the
Church in the world.
Writing in the August issue
of Priests - USA, monthly
publication of the NFPC,
Father Bonnike quoted from
the two documents.
They speak, he said, of the
“real world in which the
Church and the priesthood
find their mission .. .a world
of ‘flagrant inequalities,’ of
‘wide diversity,’ of
‘urbanization,’ of ‘new
loneliness,’ of ‘new
proletariats which require
remaking at the level of the
street, of the neighborhood,
of the great agglomerative
dwellings’.”
“They speak,” Father
Bonnike said, “of various
systems and ideologies, and
yet maintain that the Spirit
of the Lord will urge every
Christian ‘to go beyond every
system, every ideology.’ In
spite of all this diversity, ‘the
bonds which unite the
faithful are mightier than
anything which divides them.’
What a framework out of
which to build a case for a
pluralism of ministries!”
The documents “speak so
eloquently of the sensitivity
which we should have for the
dignity and rights of all
persons, which, to be
thoroughly consistent, must
also pertain to the person of
the priest,” Father Bonnike
said.
He also said the documents
“clearly provide the setting
for a better understanding of
the priests’ involvement in
political activity and in
priests’ associations of all
types.”
TV Movie Reviews
INVESTMENT BROKER-NUN - “Jo Ellen Moser, registered
representative,” sells bonds and mutual funds at the Milwaukee
office of B.C. Ziegler and Company, an investment firm, three
days a week. The rest of the week she is Sister Jo Ellen Moser,
OJP., : add assumes the duties of treasurer general of the Racine
Dominican Sisters. Here, Sister Jo Ellen discusses business with
Grant Wilcox, resident manager of the local office of Ziegler
company. (NC PHOTO, courtesy Catholic Herald Citizen)
Friday, Aug. 6 (CBS)
TERM OF TRIAL (1963)
(A REPEAT)
Laurence Olivier portrays a
meek, patient high-school teacher,
who must put up with the slings
and arrows fired his way by an
unappreciative, carping wife
(Simone Signoret), a student who
has a crush on him (Sarah Miles,
who became Ryan’s Daughter), a
young punk (Terence Stamp), and
barren British surroundings.
The critics were generally cool
toward it, despite the stellar cast
and the direction of Peter
Glenville, who also directed
Becket. But an International
Catholic Film Office awards jury
singled this out as a fine film
filled with social values.
NCOMP rated it A-3,-
unobjectionable for adults.
Saturday, AUg. 7 (NBC)
SEBASTIAN (1968)
(A REPEAT)
A rather sophisticated British
spy drama, starring Dirk Bogarde,
who is aided by computers in his
derring-do, most of it involving
cracking a secret code.
Critics fell in love with this film
because—despite all the complex
hardware—the hero comes off as a
rather human character.
NCOMP rated this one A-3,
unobjectionable for adults.
Sunday, Aug. 8 (ABC)
AFRICA-TEXAS STYLE (1967)
(A REPEAT)
A pleasant, entertaining
adventure film made by Ivan
(Flipper) Tors about a cowboy
(Hugh O’Brian) who rounds up
zebras, gazelles and other African
wildlife for a game-conservationist
in Kenya (John Mills).
Tors is a master at filming
wildlife, the camerawork is
excellent and there is a strong
point made about dignity and
being humane.
NCOMP rated it A-1,
unobjectionable for all, and the
kids should enjoy it.
Monday, Aug. 9 (ABC)
SERGEANT DEADHEAD (1965)
(A REPEAT)
This is a comedy starring
Frankie Avalon, former teen
singing idol, who plays a
serviceman on duty at a missile
base while pursuing redhead
Deborah Walley, He’s accidentally
shot into space and a double
impersonates him—at the base
and with Miss Walley, alt the way
to the altar.
REASSIGNED - The
Cincinnati based Glenmary
Home Missioners have
announced the re-assignment
of the Reverend William
Smith from Holy Redeemer
Parish in McRae, Georgia, to
St. Bernard’s Parish in New
Bloomfield, Pennsylvania.
Father Smith, 49, is a native
of Chicago and the son of Mr.
and Mrs. William Smith of
Satsuma Road in Seminole,
Florida. Father has been a
member of the one hundred
member Glenmary Home
Missioners for twenty-four
years.
There are some good character
sketches, particularly by Fred
Clark, Gale Gordon, Buster
Keaton and Eve Arden.
NCOMP rated this one A-3,
unobjectionable for adults.
Tuesday, Aug. 10 (NBC)
AFTER THE FOX (1966)
Peter Sellers stars as a
notorious Italian criminal who
escapes from prison, then
masquerades as a film director
making a neo-realist film in a
seacoast town, all to smuggle a
cargo of stolen gold into Italy.
It was Neil Simon’s first
screenplay, but not a good one,
and the film suffers from
over-acting on Sellers’ part,
interesting, however, is a
portrayal by Victor Mature of a
fading movie idol, plus the
background music of Burt
Bacharach.
NCOMP rated it A-2,
unobjectionable for adults and
adolescents.
Thursday, Aug. 12 (CBS)
WHO’S MINDING THE STORE?
(1963) (A REPEAT)
If you like Jerry Lewis
slapstick comedy, this is the place
to get your order filled. Lewis is
let loose in a department store,
and there are many zany
sequences, especially one in which
he tries to sell shoes to a fat lady
wrestler, another in which a
vacuum sweeper gets out of
control.
Critics felt that someone let the
story line get out of control—the
mother of Jerry’s sweetheart (Jill
St. John) got him the job to get
him out of her daughter’s
life—but scripts mean little in
Lewis films.
NCOMP rated this film A-1,
unobjectionable for all.
Friday, Aug. 13 (CBS)
CANNON
This is a new made-for-TV
movie, starring William Conrad, in
a pilot for a new series this Fall
about a tough detective. No
ratings for such films.
Saturday, Aug. 14 (NBC)
THE LOST MAN (1969)
(A REPEAT)
Sidney Poitier, in his first
departure from a "nice Black
guy” role, masterminds a payroll
holdup at an all-White factory in
order to get money for the
families of jailed Black militants.
A guard is killed and Poitier
spends the rest of the film on the
run until he dies—shot in a police
ambush—in the armi of the White
socialite (Joanna Shimkus) who
loves hem.
The film was greeted coolly by
the critics, many of whom
disliked this transplant of the
1940’s Odd Man Out (which had
John J. McCreary, Post
Chaplain of the Jos. N. Neew
Jr., Post No. 3 American
Legion and member of St.
Joseph’s Parish, Macon, was
honored as an “Outstanding
Legionaire of the Year” at
ceremonies held on July 17.
McCreary was also cited
for his work as chairman of
the committee which
prepared the “For God and
Country Program of Post No.
3, which won the Department
award this year.
In making the “Legionaire
of the Year” award L.R.
Underwood of the award
committee pointed out that
McCreary was “always ready
to serve the* Legion when
called upon and over and
beyond the call of duty, was
a consistant go-getter in the
a similar plot, with James Mason
as thief) from Ireland and the
I.R.A. to a modern U.S D city and
Black militants.
The Lost Man was faulted for
over-simplification of Black
problems and soap-opera turns in
the script, but as NCOMP
observed in rating it A-3,
unobjectionable for adults: “If it
causes even a few complaisant
citizens to have second thoughts
about the urgency of today’s
troubles, this will more than
justify The Lost Man’s existence.”
Sunday, Aug. 15 (ABC)
THE ST. VALENTINE’S DAY
MASSACRE (1967)
(A REPEAT)
This is a semi-documentary
version of the gang war in
late-20’s Chicago between AI
Capone (Jason Robarbs Jr.) and
Bugs Moran (Ralph Meeker),
climaxed by the Feb. 14, 1929,
execution of seven of Moran’s
men by Capone’s hoods, dressed
as policemen raiding a garage.
The film was generally
deplored as nothing but an excuse
for bang-bang violence, with very
little insight into the men and the
times.
NCOMP rated this A-3,
unobjectionable for adults.
Monday, Aug. 16 (ABC)
A BREATH OF SCANDAL (1960)
(A REPEAT)
A big, lavish production was
made out of a minor story about
a Hapsburg princess (Sophia
Loren) who spends a seemingly
immoral (but totally innocent)
night in a hunting lodge with a
handsome American (John
Gavin).
There are lots of jewels, ornate
Viennese settings, dazzling
costumes, and an apparently
disinterested Maurice Chevalier
walking through his role in this
tale adapted loosely from a play
by Ferenc Molnar.
NCOMP rated this one B,
objectionable in part for all,
because “the satirical nature of
this film is not a license for
suggestive costuming and
situations.”
Tuesday, Aug. 17 (NBC)
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY (1966)
Elvis Presley stars as a
singer-gambler aboard a Southern
riverboat, supported by Harry
Morgan, Donna (Beverly
Hillbillies) Douglas, Sue Ane
Langdon.
Critics felt this was one pretty
flat film, the “pretty” belonging
to the scenery and the priced
costumes. There’s a rousing
rendition of When the Saints Go
Marching In, but that’s about it.
NCOMP rated this A-2,
unobjectionable for adults and
adolescents.
membership drive.”
McCreary was an organizer,
charter member, First
Adjatant, later Commander
of the Joseph N. Neel, Jr.
Post 3, American Legion in
Macon and since 1952, has
served as its Chaplain. Since
the 1954-55 Legion Year, he
has been a leader of his post
and auxiliary unit’s “For God
and Country Program.” In
service, not in age, he is the
senior of the Post’s Past
Commanders.
Awards were also
presented in the various
membership drives and
officers installed for the
coming year. Raymond
Clements is the new Post
Commander and Aliene
Warchak heads the Auxiliary.
MACON POST 3
Legion Honors
John McCreary
Shop Easily at Stores and
Service Establishments
Displaying this Emblem.
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In Savannah
Our 54th Year
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234-8868
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Richardson Florists Inc.
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SAVANNAH, GA.
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